Hand and Wheel: Contemporary Japanese Clay

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Hand and Wheel: Contemporary Japanese Clay HAND AND WHEEL Contemporary Japanese Clay NOvember 1, 2014 – OCTober 18, 2015 PORTLAND ART MUSEUM, OREGON HAND AND WHEEL Contemporary Japanese Clay Among the great ceramic traditions of the world, ceramics. Yet this core population of consumers the Japanese alone sustain a thriving studio pot- is, on its own, insufficient to account for the cur- ter industry on a grand scale. More than 10,000 rent boom in both creativity and critical acclaim. Japanese potters make a living crafting ceramics Today, museums in Japan and abroad and private to adorn the table for everyday life, in addition to collectors in the West have assumed a prominent specialized wares for the tea ceremony. Whether role in nurturing Japanese ceramics—especially made from rough, unglazed stoneware or refined large-scale pieces and the work of the avant- porcelain, these intimately scaled art works are an garde artists who push the boundaries of tech- indispensable part of Japanese rituals of dining nique, material, and form. and hospitality. The high demand of domestic Many contemporary Japanese ceramic artists consumers for functional vessels, as well as their —especially those who came of age in the informed connoisseurship of regional and even 1950s—are exceptionally skilled at throwing pots 33 the individual styles of famous masters, underlies on a wheel. They often prefer to use traditional of the firing process. Here, the pieces by Naka- the commercial success of Japanese studio wood-fired kilns, embracing the unpredictability zato Takashi, Ōtani Shirō, and Yoshida Yoshihiko, among others, rely on yōhen, or “fire-changes,” for much of their visual impact. These yōhen wares exemplify the best of Japan’s enduring taste for wabi-sabi, an austere simplicity infused with emotional depth. But as concerns for air pollution have driven wood-fired kilns away from Japan’s cities, pot- ters have turned increasingly to gas or electric kilns, which allow for greater control. Closely managed, scientific firing conditions are essential for producing the exquisitely nuanced seihakuji (pale blue) porcelains of Kawase Shinobu, Katō Tsubusa, and Yagi Akira, or the brilliantly colored glazes of Morino Taimei and Hoshino Satoru. Interestingly, those artists consciously working within global idioms are the most likely to shape their works by means other than a wheel. Morino’s massive ceramic slab (cat. 14) and Takiguchi Kazuo’s tri-lobed vase (cat. 29) were both formed with the aid of molds, for example, while Hoshi- no’s writhing, organic Spring Snow No. 12 (cat. 4) and Fujikasa Satoko’s dynamic Flow #1 (cat. 35) were built by coiling and pinching strips of clay. Collecting resumed in the late 1990s, as Jenkins and then, after 2007, his successor, Maribeth Graybill, took groups from the Museum’s Asian Art Council to New York every spring to visit art dealers during “Asia Week.” At least nine works now in the Museum were acquired on these occa- sions from Frederick and Joan Baekeland, propri- etors of Toyobi Far Eastern Art. Fred Baekeland was an enthusiastic advocate for contemporary Japanese ceramics, and his exhaustively researched 1993 catalogue, Modern Japanese Ceramics in American Collections, has become an invaluable resource for aspiring collectors. At the time of this writing, the Museum’s holdings in contemporary Japanese ceramics have grown to 40 works, by a total of 30 artists. Despite the small size of the sampling, the collection is nicely 11 balanced between different generations of art- Hand and Wheel celebrates nearly a half-century In 1988, then-curator of Asian art Donald Jenkins ists. Appropriately, the list begins with Hamada of collecting contemporary Japanese clay art at organized Contemporary Japanese Ceramics, a Shōji and Kawai Kanjirō, founders of the Folk the Portland Art Museum. The first acquisition pioneering exhibition that introduced Portland Art Movement in Japan. Born in the 1890s, both came in 1968, when the Museum purchased audiences to 38 works by ten outstanding artists. had careers that spanned much of the twentieth Yanagihara Mutsuo’s Mandolin (cat. 39) from A few works were borrowed from American century. Morino Taimei, Yoshida Yoshihiko, and a local craft gallery. Mandolin had been made museums and private individuals, but the majority Nakazato Takashi, all born in the 1930s, are still in 1966, when Yanagihara was a visiting faculty were lent by the artists themselves. Jenkins active and revered as senior masters. Fukami member at the University of Washington. later raised the funds to acquire two of the most Sueharu and Hoshino Satoru, born in the 1940s, Mandolin marked a significant breakthrough in intriguing sculptural pieces in the exhibition, and Kawase Shinobu, Akiyama Yō, Takiguchi the artist’s oeuvre, moving away from traditional Suzuki Osamu’s A Balloon on the Sea (cat. 38) Kazuo, and Yagi Akira, born in the 1950s, are Japanese forms and glazes: it is among the and Fukami Sueharu’s Mental Image: Toward mature artists of international renown. Emerging earliest pieces in which he experimented with the Other Side (cat. 36). talent is represented by Fujikasa Satoko, a young whimsical forms and bright colors. woman now in her thirties. The 33 works seen in this dossier presentation, as well as others on long-term display in the Japanese Gallery and the Jubitz Center for Modern and Contemporary Art, illustrate the superb craftsmanship and artistic creativity that characterize Japanese ceramics of the 1950s to the present. The Museum is deeply grateful to the donors and lenders who have made this project possible. Maribeth Graybill, Ph.D. The Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Curator of Asian Art 18 Kawai Kanjirō (Japanese, Kobayashi Hideo (Japanese, born 1890–1966) 1951) 8. Rectangular Bottle with Floral 12. Shino kuro yakishime hanaike Design, 1950/1966 (Black Shino Unglazed Vase), Stoneware with copper red glaze 1995/1997 and trailed white slip Stoneware with carbonized surface 1 10 /4 x 6 x 4 inches and white glaze 1 1 5 Bequest of Margery Hoffman Smith 14 /4 x 12 /4 x 3 /8 inches 83.38.335 Museum Purchase: Funds provided by the Asian Art Council Kawakami Rikizō (Japanese, born 1998.30 1935) 9. Wall Series No. 6, 1989 Matsuo Jun (Japanese, born 1961) Stoneware 13. Shiogamasai kaki (Salt-glazed 1 1 3 19 /2 x 9 /4 x 4 /4 inches Vase), 2000/2003 Gift of the Majart Gallery in honor Stoneware with salt glaze 3 1 15 of Donald Jenkins 14 /4 x 14 /8 x 14 /16 inches 91.46 Gift of Jerry Lamb 2009.19 Kawase Shinobu (Japanese, born 1950) Morino Taimei (Japanese, born 10. Deep Bowl, 1990/1999 1934) Porcelain with pale bluish-green 14. Untitled, 1967 glaze (seihakuji) Stoneware with feldspathic glazes 3 3 1 4 x 10 /8 x 9 /4 inches 24 /4 x 21 x 3 inches The Carol and Seymour Haber Gift of the artist 16 Collection 2001.7 2011.92.3 CHECKLIST Hayashi Kaku (Japanese, born 15. Un ran kabin (Cloudy Indigo Flower Taiwan 1953) Kimura Moriyasu (Japanese, born Vase), ca. 2000 In object dimensions, height precedes 3. Zero, 2012 1935) Stoneware with turquoise and width or diameter precedes depth. Stoneware 11. Tenmoku Tea Bowl, 1990/2002 metallic glaze 19 7/ x 20 x 11 inches 3 1 Japanese titles are given when pro- 8 Stoneware with tenmoku oil spot 9 /8 x 8 /2 inches vided by the artist. Gift of Mary and Cheney Cowles glaze Gift of Margaret L.L.C. Jones 2014.49.2 1 7 3 /2 x 4 /8 inches 2014.6.1 Museum Purchase: Margery Hoshino Satoru (Japanese, born Hoffman Smith Fund Hamada Shōji (Japanese, 1945) 1894–1978) 4. Spring Snow No. 12, 2007 2002.3 1. Square Bottle, 1960/1980 Stoneware with white and copper- Stoneware with translucent white blue glazes glaze over iron-painted design 20 x 11 inches 1 11 11 11 /8 x 4 /16 x 4 /16 inches Gift of a private donor Bequest of Margery Hoffman Smith 2013.8.53 83.38.336 Hosokawa Morihiro (Japanese, 2. Moon Flask with Hakeme Glaze, born 1938) 1960/1980 5. Shigaraki bachi (Shigaraki-style Earthenware with translucent Bowl), 2008/2011 glaze over iron-painted design and Stoneware 1 13 brushed white slip 3 /8 x 11 /16 inches 1 1 7 x 5 /2 x 4 /2 inches Gift of Mary and Cheney Cowles The Carol and Seymour Haber 2012.31.2 Collection 2011.92.1 Kaneko Nobuhiko (Japanese, born 1951) 6. Nidai yōhen hanaire (Second- generation Glaze Transformation Vase), 1990/1997 Stoneware with Hagi glaze 1 1 1 6 /8 x 7 /8 x 5 /16 inches Gift of Virginia Nelson 1998.6 Katō Tsubusa (Japanese, born 1962) 7. Mudai (Untitled), ca. 2000 Porcelain with pale bluish-green glaze (seihakuji) 3 3 3 9 /8 x 24 /4 x 13 /4 inches Museum Purchase: Margery Hoffman Smith Fund 2001.11 13 44 Suzuki Gorō (Japanese, born 1941) 13. Iga Chair, 2001 Stoneware with ash glaze 3 3 18 /4 x 8 x 7 /4 inches Gift of a private donor 2013.8.169 Takiguchi Kazuo (Japanese, born 1953) 14. Mudai (Untitled), 1995 Stoneware with crackled mustard glaze 1 1 1 12 /2 x 15 /2 x 11 /2 inches Gift of Mary and Cheney Cowles 2013.95.1 Yagi Akira (Japanese, born 1955) 15. Seihakuji shinogi futamono (Fluted Bowl with Cover), 2007 Porcelain with pale bluish-green glaze (seihakuji) 2 6 x 8 inches Museum Purchase: Funds provided Nakazato Takashi (Japanese, Sasayama Tadayasu (Japanese, 5. Karatsu hakeme yunomi (Karatsu- by Anne G. Berg, Marjory Berry, born 1937) born 1939) style Teacup with Brushed Slip Kay Dodge, William J. Huebner, 1. E-Karatsu bachi (Karatsu-style 9. Akai tōmen (Red Clay Surface), Design), 2000 Donna Larson, Janet Liles, Travers Deep Bowl with Pictorial Design), 1982 Stoneware with brushed white slip Polak, and Elsa Porter 1972 1 5 11 Stoneware with metallic glaze 3 /8 x 2 /8 x 2 /16 inches 5 1 1 2008.20 Stoneware with iron oxide painting Lent by Terry Welch 15 /16 x 14 /8 x 2 /8 inches under translucent white glaze The Carol and Seymour Haber Yoshida Yoshihiko (Japanese, 7 7 6.
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